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Wasabi Teams With Veeam For Data Protection, Recovery In Hybrid Or Multi-Cloud Environments

The Wasabi S3-compatible storage cloud acts as a storage target for customers and partners working with Veeam Availability Suite 9.5 Update 4 but at a fraction of the cost of Amazon's cloud-based storage, Wasabi says.

Wasabi, the cloud storage provider that says it provides cloud storage capacity that is one-fifth the cost and six times the performance of that of Amazon S3, Tuesday unveiled a partnership with Veeam under which Wasabi is providing a low-cost storage target for Veeam customers.

Under the new relationship, Wasabi has become a Veeam Technology Alliance partner and integrated its cloud storage offering into the Veeam Availability offerings, said David Friend, CEO of Boston-based Wasabi.

"'[They] already have a big channel in place," he said. "They already have to do something with the storage. We need to explain to them, rather than sell an EMC box or a NetApp box to store your backups with, store it in the cloud. Veeam just recently announced an S3 API on the back end. It's just as easy to store your data on S3 or Wasabi as it is to store your data on a server."

Veeam is a good partner for Wasabi because of its 61,000-strong partner community, said Michael Welts, Wasabi's chief marketing officer.

And it's a relationship Wasabi hopes to duplicate with other storage vendors, Welts said. He pointed to the recent move by Waltham, Mass.-based Actifio, which unveiled Wasabi cloud storage as a target for the Actifio Go multi-cloud copy data management SaaS platform.

"That maps to the same strategy that we're about to do with Veeam here," he said. "Our goal is by the end of the year to have a half-dozen of these best-known brands in their categories now pointing to us as one of their cloud storage reserves."

Solution providers that work with Veeam will have customers with on-premises hardware that need to have their data protected but have someone else manage it, Friend said.

Wasabi is neutral storage, Friend said. "Amazon, Google and Microsoft would like to have 100 percent of your data center on their cloud," he said. "And so, the MSP competes with those guys."

Wasabi forms a really good cloud target for protecting longer-term backups that are stored as object storage, said Matt Chesterton, CEO of OffsiteDataSync, a Rochester, N.Y.-based cloud service provider working with both Veeam and Wasabi.

A lot of solution providers like the Veeam technology but sometimes find it difficult to roll out offerings like Veeam Cloud Connect, Chesterton told CRN.

The combination of Veeam and Wasabi makes a big difference, he said.

"Wasabi often has a presence in the same data centers we use," he said. "We present Wasabi as a local storage target. It's a big help. Wasabi performs well and helps offload bandwidth. If Wasabi doesn't have a presence in the data center, we have back-end links that make it still act like it's on-premises for us."